FORMER ANTIOCH POLICE OFFICER FOUND GUILTY OF CONSPIRACY TO DISTRIBUTE ANABOLIC STEROIDS AND OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE

Caligrower

New Member
sounds like they convicted this cop on a friend to friend deal while investigating stuff from corruption in the police department. Kinda crazy they would go after him for this.




OAKLAND – A federal jury convicted former Antioch police officer Devon Wenger of one count of conspiracy to distribute and possess with the intent to distribute anabolic steroids and one count of obstruction of justice. The jury’s verdict follows a three-day trial before Senior U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White.

Wenger, 33, was previously employed as a police officer with the Antioch Police Department. According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Wenger conspired with Daniel Harris, who was at the time also a police officer with the Antioch Police Department, to distribute anabolic steroids to a third individual, and then deleted evidence of this conspiracy from his cellular phone.

“Instead of upholding the law, as he swore an oath to do, Devon Wenger conspired with a fellow officer to sell illegal anabolic steroids. When the FBI arrived at his home to investigate him, he then doubled down by destroying evidence of his crime. Crimes like these by a police officer have a corrosive effect on the public’s trust in law enforcement. Thanks to today’s jury conviction, Mr. Wenger will now face sentencing for his violations of law,” said Acting United States Attorney Patrick D. Robbins.

“When Devon Wenger broke the law and then tried to cover his tracks, he didn’t just commit a crime — he betrayed the trust of the community he was sworn to serve. After learning the FBI was outside his home with a search warrant, he chose to delete evidence rather than come clean. That kind of misconduct corrodes public confidence in law enforcement,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Sanjay Virmani. “Today’s guilty verdict makes clear that the FBI will hold accountable anyone who abuses the authority and responsibility of public service.”

According to the evidence presented at trial, in February 2022, Wenger set up the sale of anabolic steroids, a Schedule III controlled substance, between Harris and a third individual. Harris was also charged in this case and pleaded guilty to his role in the conspiracy on Sept. 17, 2024. Law enforcement officials seized the package of anabolic steroids destined for Harris before they arrived, although Wenger continued to communicate with Harris about supplying the third individual with anabolic steroids, including offering to give this individual some of Wenger’s own while they waited for the delayed package.

On March 23, 2022, at 8:03 a.m., the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) began calling and sending text messages to Wenger telling him that they were outside of his residence with a warrant. It was not until 9:00 a.m. that Wenger appeared for the FBI to seize Wenger’s cellular phone. Later forensic examination of that device showed that specific entries related to the anabolic steroid distribution conspiracy had been deleted: specifically, all text messages between Wenger and Harris, all text messages between Wenger and the third individual he was trying to supply with steroids, the contacts for both Harris and the third individual, and recent call log entries for Wenger’s most recent phone calls with the third individual.

The jury convicted Wenger of all counts charged in this case: one count of conspiracy to distribute and possess with the intent to distribute anabolic steroids in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846, 841(a)(1), and (b)(1)(E)(i) and one count of destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in federal investigations (obstruction of justice) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1519.

Wenger is scheduled to appear on May 6, 2025, for a hearing on whether to remand him to custody pending sentencing. He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison on the conspiracy to distribute anabolic steroids count and 20 years in prison on the obstruction of justice count. Any sentence will be imposed by the Court only after consideration of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and the federal statute governing the imposition of a sentence, 18 U.S.C. § 3553.

The case is being prosecuted by the National Security & Special Prosecutions Section and the Oakland Branch of the United States Attorney’s Office. This prosecution is the result of an investigation by the FBI and the Office of the Contra Costa County District Attorney.

* * *

Separately, Wenger is scheduled to appear before Senior U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White on May 6, 2025, for a status conference in United States v. Wenger, 23-cr-00269, which charges Wenger with one count of conspiracy against rights in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 241 and one count of deprivation of rights under color of law in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 242. The United States v. Wenger, 23-cr-00269 case is set for trial on July 21, 2025.

These charges against Wenger were brought as part of an investigation into the Antioch and Pittsburgh police departments that resulted in multiple charges against 10 current and former officers and employees of these two police departments for various crimes ranging from the use of excessive force to fraud.
 
The problem for him is that since they discovered this while investigating some high profile civil rights violation he's being prosecuted for, and the fact he's a cop, there's no way this could be ignored. They'd be accused of favoritism. If they found out he ripped off a "do not remove under penalty of law" tag from his mattress they'd hit him with federal charges.
 
They intercepted his mail. I wonder what was the tipoff that got them to do it or gave them probable cause to open the mail / have a search warrant.

It also says he was procuring from a FL dealer /brewer so did the brewer get rolled and the feds went off a list ?
 
They intercepted his mail. I wonder what was the tipoff that got them to do it or gave them probable cause to open the mail / have a search warrant.

It also says he was procuring from a FL dealer /brewer so did the brewer get rolled and the feds went off a list ?

Internal Affairs was investigating something else, and found text messages on one of the cops' phones they downloaded.

Basically "hey bro I've got a great source and will get some for you if you want!".

Even offering to get a friend a single vial is conspiracy to distribute Sched III. Don't do it. Let them buy it themselves and it remains a minor crime no one's really interested in prosecuting.
 
The FBI gave him an entire hour to clean house. That's professional courtesy.
He (Wenger) was not at home.

The steroids seized as evidence were in a shipment that was intercepted, not at his house, nor did he send them. He may have never touched the or even seen them. Some third person named Harris sent them to another person, not Wenger. Wenger, facilitated the sale via texts and phone calls.

Harris plead guilty. He was the dealer (and also a police officer) and probably testified against Wenger. The feds probably had Harris's text messages.

The FBI was there for his phone. When they discovered he was not home, they called and texted him. He showed up an hour later with all of the texts with Harris, the snitch, deleted, as well as all of the texts with the unidentified buyer. Wenger deleted all contacts and call logs, too.

Harris, the dealer cop, probably did not have any text messages with the buyer, so the feds could not get him.

It is a pretty simple matter to get the call logs from the service provider. Maybe they did. The point of this press release is that they made an example of him for destroying the electronic evidence.
 
Among the allegations are chains of text messages sent between as many as 45 Antioch officers, using racial slurs and describing violence against suspects, and going as far as threatening Thorpe, who is African American. The N-word was used at least a dozen times, as were terms describing African Americans as "gorillas."

In another alleged text, an officer writes:

"lol putting a pistol in someone's mouth and telling them to stop stealing isn't illegal... it's an act of public service to prevent further victims of crimes."

The texts also described recently retired Police Chief Steven Ford, who is African American, in racially derogatory terms. They also contained homophobic slurs and suggested violence against unhoused people.

As many as 45 of Antioch's approximately 100 officers were placed on leave because of the texts.

 
Its illegal to type racist slurs on your phone? I'm no cop lover, but??? Who cares? And are we going to really start calling bums and homeless the "unhoused" now? Our money is being ravaged by our elected slime and foreign wars so much that we're being taught to normalize homelessness? To the point of the thread, police do not seem mentally capable of doing their job being juiced to the gills. That personality type, low to middling IQ with black and white thinking doesn't react thoughtfully on a gram of test and tren
 
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